DaTru KataLYST
Dec 31 2004, 04:24 AM
QUOTE(Zyryll @ Dec 31 2004, 12:49 AM)
science vs. religion. HAHA great topic.
okay... well since religion is always right. (that's what i was taught at chuch) i think, religion is better!

Please, this is debate..
Make a statement, and back it up with concrete evidence.
Spirited Away
Dec 31 2004, 11:35 AM
QUOTE(Zyryll @ Dec 31 2004, 3:49 AM)
science vs. religion. HAHA great topic.
okay... well since religion is always right. (that's what i was taught at chuch) i think, religion is better!

"Chuch" sure is smart to teach you that religion is right all the time... but "Chuch" should really teach you how to think for yourself first.
mechwarrior1989
Jan 1 2005, 05:47 PM
Science is of course more important. What if we didn't have science and relyed merely upon religion? Great, you are now in a position to contract small pox and die. There goes your life. Because of science, deadly diseases have been virtually eliminated. I hardly see that happening during the middle ages with the out break of the Black Plague seeing as how 1/3 of Europe's population died even though they were all highly religious. I'm sure all that praying helped to save them.
Religion cannot be confused with ethics, ethics are what we aquire as we grow up which determain what we believe to be right or wrong. Religion can sometimes govern our ethics, but then we can look at certain religions that teach people to kill. The Taliban uses religion as a reason to kill Americans and other infidels. Good job religion, way to screw us over again. The good that religion can do though are things like bringing people together or giving people hope, but other things can do that as well, so what does religion ultimatly do? Nothing, just a waste of time, and money.
mechwarrior1989
Jan 1 2005, 05:53 PM
QUOTE
aznxdreamer Posted on Dec 25 2004, 4:42 PM what about religons? do they do any good and help people ? does it make them them feel safer ?
Key word, feel. So religion lulls us into a false sense of security. What if barbarians with technology superior to our own were to threaten to destroy us? Would us having more religion save us? I think not. Suppose a nuke was heading at your house, sent by people who have absolutly no belief in religion, only personal gain, would you praying save you? During the times of the Roman Empire, they would throw Christians into the Colossium and let out hungry lions. Of course the Christians would get in a circle and they'd star praying their hearts out, but eventurally they would all be eaten and the crowds would roar and everyone would leave cheerful, except the Christians who are now ripped to pieces and leave in the bellies of the lions.
mechwarrior1989
Jan 1 2005, 05:59 PM
QUOTE(TreesTurnMeOn @ Dec 27 2004, 12:43 PM)
Religion...It is really really important to me and I am very close with God. (please don't be offended

)
I am so offended, you are closer to God than I am, so who's keeping score exactly? How many points do you have and how exactly do you find out? So what do you get after you win? Can you even win? So how do you score points? Do you get a point everytime you go to church? Do you get a point when you pray? Do you get a point when you go on those retreats which are basically for having fun with the coverup as being a way to get "closer" to God? If I were to stand on stilts, I'd be taller than you, wouldn't I then be closer to God? Because you're closer to god, does that mean a halo of light glows around you constantly? Has God given you any special powers to convert the heathens? So has God whispered in your ear and told you of the future? What in the world gives you the idea that you're closer to God? Oh yea, you're tight with God so he probably told you that you're his number one right? ARe you even thinking when you say that or are you just blurting out the crap that they brainwash you with at church?
QUOTE(TreesTurnMeOn @ Dec 27 2004, 12:43 PM)
Science may explain to us how many things happen but it is leading us to loads of problems, like the stem cell research and such. Most of science is inhumane and the only way I agree with science is if it is stating
facts, not some mythological bullshit.
So do you believe that EVERYTHING in the bible is true? Both old and new? Or only new? And since when did you decide what was fact and what was not? What if evolution was a fact? You would then be contradicting yourself. Do you know what mythological means?
Main Entry: myth·o·log·i·cal
Pronunciation: "mi-th&-'lä-ji-k&l
Variant(s): also myth·o·log·ic /-jik/
Function: adjective
1 : of or relating to mythology or myths : dealt with in mythology
2 : lacking factual basis or historical validity : MYTHICAL,
So either you're saying that the theory of evolution relates to myths or that it lacks factual basis or historical validity. Well I can assure you that it doesn't fit into either of those catagories. HOWEVER, I can think of certain Christian ideals that do fit into one of those two, for example, the belief that there is a God. I believe that that lacks a great deal of factual basis. The theory of Adam and Eve being the first two humans and then populating the earth, yea bit of a problem with that as well. Where are the facts or historical validity for that matter? Seems like a myth to me. So if I understand you correctly, you'd be calling you're own religion bullshit which is right since that's exactly what it is.
Mireh
Jan 1 2005, 07:19 PM
I'm starting to read Angel and Deamons, [dan brown, author of da vinci code]. This dude in the book had a theory that god and science corresponded with one another, -like, it balances each other out. I think that science is a way to help us uncover the answers that we are always asking (how did the universe come to be? why are we here? do we have a purpose?), but in the end, it leads to god.
sorry for my vaugueness.
illriginal
Apr 21 2008, 01:36 PM
Both.
Tweeti
Apr 21 2008, 02:14 PM
I think they're both important, i'm a christian but science has advanced us alot. I've heard things on the news scientifically proving the bible right, like with the finding of Noah's ark.
illriginal
Apr 21 2008, 02:28 PM
QUOTE(Tweeti @ Apr 21 2008, 03:14 PM)

I think they're both important, i'm a christian but science has advanced us alot. I've heard things on the news scientifically proving the bible right, like with the finding of Noah's ark.
o.O can you source that? I thought scientists were still having a hard time with findin it?
Tweeti
Apr 22 2008, 02:40 PM
QUOTE(illmortal @ Apr 21 2008, 02:28 PM)

o.O can you source that? I thought scientists were still having a hard time with findin it?
i heard it on the news, i went to kctv.com and they deleted the article because it is over 2 weeks old, but here iss somthing that i googled.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/20...7_noahsark.html
NoSex
Apr 22 2008, 06:03 PM
QUOTE(Tweeti @ Apr 22 2008, 02:40 PM)

i heard it on the news, i went to kctv.com and they deleted the article because it is over 2 weeks old, but here iss somthing that i googled.
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/20...7_noahsark.htmlYou may want to learn how to
actually research, as opposed to cherry picking what you like... same site, easy google find, four months later:
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/20..._noahs_ark.htmlNoah's Ark has never been found and there is all evidence to the contrary that the flood even ever occurred.Science wins, sorry.
Melissa
Apr 22 2008, 07:39 PM
There's no use arguing against a religion using science. Most religions are based on faith, so it doesn't matter if there's scientific proof that Noah's Arc never happened. Therefore, you can't really say science wins. I can't really think of an example right now, but if you were in some sort of abstract, psychological competition based on beliefs and were told that the other side won because, in their logic, everything points to what they believe, you'd probably tell them to stfu.
While there may be claims of scientific findings supporting events in the Bible, in the end, it all comes down to faith. And science can't really shake that.
And... I'm not speaking as a Christian or an Atheist, since at the moment, I'm really... nothing. I don't claim to be agnostic, religious, atheist, whatever. I'm just confused.
datass
May 3 2008, 07:36 AM
thinking of how you word your sentences now, and how you did back in 2004.. makes me laugh.
anyways.
science is much better. science is basically what has changed our world from farming and sword fighting to cars without the horse. without scientific knowledge, and just plain faith, it just wont get us far.
NoSex
May 3 2008, 03:16 PM
QUOTE(heartquasm @ Apr 22 2008, 07:39 PM)

There's no use arguing against a religion using science. Most religions are based on faith, so it doesn't matter if there's scientific proof that Noah's Arc never happened. Therefore, you can't really say science wins. I can't really think of an example right now, but if you were in some sort of abstract, psychological competition based on beliefs and were told that the other side won because, in their logic, everything points to what they believe, you'd probably tell them to stfu.
Here, I'll try to construct a more obvious analogy for you:
If you're playing the game of basketball, you follow a certain set of rules (these rules help the game along). Well, imagine that you decided that, for whatever reason, you wanted to invent a contrary set of arbitrary (maybe nondescript) rules for basketball. Now, that's fine and all, but those rules might not be conductive to the spirit of the game (consider the reality of epistemology and the scientific method). If you try to implement those rules, against the rules of the original game, you're going to look like an ass. Further, you aren't going to convince anyone that you're a good or fair player. Essentially, you'll just ruin the game for everyone.
It's sort of like science and faith. The principles of science are demonstrative; they are tested and work very well. We can make predictions using science, and can, using strict rationalism, find out exactly where we might have gone wrong in a specific hypothesis. In the case of faith, none of this is true. We can not form meaningful predictions using faith. We can not demonstrate faith. We can not point out precisely where one may or may not go wrong in their own practice of faith. In fact, we don't even have a semblance of an idea of what faith truly is (aside from an emotional substitution for reason).
So, science
does win. Just because you try to change the rules in the middle of the game don't mean shit. Science wins.
Reidar
May 3 2008, 06:37 PM
Ben Stein: "Love of God and compassion and empathy leads you to a very glorious place, and science leads you to killing people."
I couldn't agree more, which is why science wins.
Tweeti
May 3 2008, 07:28 PM
QUOTE(NoSex @ Apr 22 2008, 06:03 PM)

You may want to learn how to
actually research, as opposed to cherry picking what you like... same site, easy google find, four months later:
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/20..._noahs_ark.htmlNoah's Ark has never been found and there is all evidence to the contrary that the flood even ever occurred.Science wins, sorry.
Well, maybe you may want to learn how to
actually research things... this is as of 2008.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1972044/postsFound Material evidence... science doesn't win, sorry.
Tung
May 3 2008, 07:45 PM
QUOTE(tungtwista @ Dec 25 2004, 05:55 PM)

like they say. you can never debate about religion and science. its too vast and complicated =\
I posted this 4 years ago, and I still stand by it.
Science is an ideology, and has it's limitations. Science is a social institution just like religion is. Science is a method of empirical observation, they have a vast body of knowledge. However, you can't take for word what science have said, as science is also a personal experience and there's bias on how you view the world. Science has two functions. 1.) to inform 2.) to answer how and why.
Science is constantly explaining the world, and there's a series notion of legitimatization on the "facts" and theories they state.
Nate, is right when he states that religion is all about faith. However, how can you prove that these things religion claims are true without possibly trying to prove it like science does? You can't. So how have the Church been able to have such an impact on so many people for so long? I think it's because of how they articulate their power, and they have persuaded people of it's appearances of natural order.
Is science ever 100% certain? No
Is religion ever 100% certain? No
Science can't ever be the answer, as much as religion can't be. Nobody wins in this debate.
brooklyneast05
May 3 2008, 07:51 PM
QUOTE(Tweeti @ May 3 2008, 07:28 PM)

Well, maybe you may want to learn how to
actually research things... this is as of 2008.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1972044/postsFound Material evidence... science doesn't win, sorry.
^ explain to me how you think a wooden structure can survive 4,000 + years
maybe you should learn how to
actually give credible sources
QUOTE
A panel of experts, comprising Turkish authorities, veteran mountaineers, archaeologists, geologists and members of Hong Kong-based Noah’s Ark Ministries International, also displayed an almost one-metre-long peice of petrified wood before the media and specially invited international experts.
do you know how long it takes to petrify wood? i'll promise you it takes a whole lot longer than the bible claims the world has even existed for.

i'm failing to see how a piece of wood would prove noah's ark
Reidar
May 3 2008, 08:08 PM
Yet
another piece of petrified wood found to be Noah's Ark? He must have had a fleet of the things.
The comments seem to coincide with that sentiment: "Look, I’m pretty religious, but we hear these 'they found Noahs’ ark!' things about twice a year now."
QUOTE(Tungster @ May 3 2008, 07:45 PM)

science is also a personal experience and there's bias on how you view the world.
Hardly. Science is about uncovering the objective truth. In the process of doing so, we must be tentative and receptive to improvements and developments because science is, by definition, self-corrective, when need be. That does not make it a relative, personal concept, susceptible to individual bias. The only bias science holds is to that which is correct.
freeridefight
May 5 2008, 09:13 AM
Science.
Science has progressed us through the ages. With the variety of branches (biology, chemistry, physics) we have come to understand the world around us much more clearly. Overall, it has better our lives much more than religion ever will.
Religion can be interpreted in so many ways, which in my eyes is so retarded. Why the hell would you want to follow principles and rules that could of been misinterpreted by a group of people or person in the past where the circumstances were so much different.
I'm not saying we should denounce these morals and values, but science is way more important.
Overall, isn't that was religion is? Understanding the world around us?
Tung
May 5 2008, 11:41 AM
^ u can say the same for religion.
freeridefight
May 5 2008, 02:40 PM
QUOTE(Tungster @ May 5 2008, 12:41 PM)

^ u can say the same for religion.

How has religion allowed us to find true solid facts about the world around us?
There have been to many wars or violence for that matter because one person interpreted this and another didn't. That, Tung, is not science.
Tung
May 5 2008, 04:21 PM
Re-read your post douche. You never said anything about "solid facts about the world around us" And that's why I said you could say the same about religion.
I'm atheist, so don't think I support religion. I'm just saying you can't say science is better than religion and that they win. Nobody wins in this case.
freeridefight
May 5 2008, 08:40 PM
QUOTE(Tungster @ May 5 2008, 05:21 PM)

Re-read your post douche. You never said anything about "solid facts about the world around us" And that's why I said you could say the same about religion.
I'm atheist, so don't think I support religion. I'm just saying you can't say science is better than religion and that they win. Nobody wins in this case.
that is what it's saying. Science gives us solid information that we use everyday. Science is way better than religion.
Where was religion ever more important than science? No where. Science wins.
Tung
May 5 2008, 09:46 PM
Sigh..you just don't get it. Let me break this down for you..and I hope you do actually read everything before replying.
Do you know what an ideology is?
Science is a social institution about which there is a great deal of misunderstanding, even among those who are part of it. We think that science is an institution, a set of methods, a set of people, a great body of knowledge that we call scientific, is somehow apart from the forces that rule our everyday lives and that govern the structure of our society. We think that science is objective. Science has brought us all kinds of good things. It has tremendously increased the production of food. It has increased our life expectancy from a mere 45 years at the beginning of the last century to over 70 in rich places like North America. It has put people on the moon and made it possible to sit at home and watch the world go by.
At the same time, science, like other productive activities, like the state, the family, sport, is a social institution completely integrated into and influenced by the structure of all our other social institutions. The problems that science deals with, the ideas that it uses in investigating those problems, even the so-called scientific results that come out of scientific investigation, are all deeply influenced by predispositions that derive from the society in which we live. Scientists do not begin life as scientists, after all, but as social beings immersed in a family, state, a productive structure, and they view nature through the lens that has been molded by their social experience.
Above that personal level of perception, science is molded by society because it is human productive activity that takes time and money, and so is guided by and directed by those forces in the world that have control over money and time. Science uses commodities and is part of the process of commodity production. Science uses money. People earn their living by science, and as a consequence the dominate social and economic forces in society determine to a large extent what science does and how it does it. More than that, those forces have the power to appropriate from science ideas that are particularly suited to the maintenance and continued prosperity of the social structures of which they are a part. So other social institutions have an input into science both in what is done and how it is thought about, and they take from science concepts and ideas that then support their institutions and make them seem legitimate and natural.
It is this dual process, on the one hand, of the social influence and control of what scientists do and say, and, on the other hand, the use of what scientists do and say to further support the institutions of society--that is meant when we speak of science as ideology.
Not saying, that science is a bad thing, we just have to realize the bias and limitations science do have. And the same could be said about religion. Nobody wins.
/debate
Melissa
May 5 2008, 10:02 PM
QUOTE(doughnut @ May 3 2008, 08:36 AM)

thinking of how you word your sentences now, and how you did back in 2004.. makes me laugh.
Are you talking to me? I'm in college now, I was in high school then. Of course the way I word my sentences would be different.
QUOTE(NoSex @ May 3 2008, 04:16 PM)

Here, I'll try to construct a more obvious analogy for you:
If you're playing the game of basketball, you follow a certain set of rules (these rules help the game along). Well, imagine that you decided that, for whatever reason, you wanted to invent a contrary set of arbitrary (maybe nondescript) rules for basketball. Now, that's fine and all, but those rules might not be conductive to the spirit of the game (consider the reality of epistemology and the scientific method). If you try to implement those rules, against the rules of the original game, you're going to look like an ass. Further, you aren't going to convince anyone that you're a good or fair player. Essentially, you'll just ruin the game for everyone.
It's sort of like science and faith. The principles of science are demonstrative; they are tested and work very well. We can make predictions using science, and can, using strict rationalism, find out exactly where we might have gone wrong in a specific hypothesis. In the case of faith, none of this is true. We can not form meaningful predictions using faith. We can not demonstrate faith. We can not point out precisely where one may or may not go wrong in their own practice of faith. In fact, we don't even have a semblance of an idea of what faith truly is (aside from an emotional substitution for reason).
So, science does win. Just because you try to change the rules in the middle of the game don't mean shit. Science wins.
Look, I understand what you're saying and I'm telling YOU that just because you and the rest of the world decided that science wins, etc., that argument is never going to work with people who are religious, so why even bother trying? They firmly believe in whatever it is they do, so no matter how much logic and rationalization you use, it's not going to do much good in their limited little worlds. I, personally, agree that "science wins." However, you're fighting a useless battle. It's like trying to teach someone who was born blind what the color red looks like; it just ain't gonna happen.
That, and please don't speak to me condescendingly. You aren't any better than me and I'm not an idiot.
Thank you and goodbye.
freeridefight
May 5 2008, 11:39 PM
QUOTE(Tungster @ May 5 2008, 10:46 PM)

Sigh..you just don't get it. Let me break this down for you..and I hope you do actually read everything before replying.
Do you know what an ideology is?
Science is a social institution about which there is a great deal of misunderstanding, even among those who are part of it. We think that science is an institution, a set of methods, a set of people, a great body of knowledge that we call scientific, is somehow apart from the forces that rule our everyday lives and that govern the structure of our society. We think that science is objective. Science has brought us all kinds of good things. It has tremendously increased the production of food. It has increased our life expectancy from a mere 45 years at the beginning of the last century to over 70 in rich places like North America. It has put people on the moon and made it possible to sit at home and watch the world go by.
At the same time, science, like other productive activities, like the state, the family, sport, is a social institution completely integrated into and influenced by the structure of all our other social institutions. The problems that science deals with, the ideas that it uses in investigating those problems, even the so-called scientific results that come out of scientific investigation, are all deeply influenced by predispositions that derive from the society in which we live. Scientists do not begin life as scientists, after all, but as social beings immersed in a family, state, a productive structure, and they view nature through the lens that has been molded by their social experience.
Above that personal level of perception, science is molded by society because it is human productive activity that takes time and money, and so is guided by and directed by those forces in the world that have control over money and time. Science uses commodities and is part of the process of commodity production. Science uses money. People earn their living by science, and as a consequence the dominate social and economic forces in society determine to a large extent what science does and how it does it. More than that, those forces have the power to appropriate from science ideas that are particularly suited to the maintenance and continued prosperity of the social structures of which they are a part. So other social institutions have an input into science both in what is done and how it is thought about, and they take from science concepts and ideas that then support their institutions and make them seem legitimate and natural.
It is this dual process, on the one hand, of the social influence and control of what scientists do and say, and, on the other hand, the use of what scientists do and say to further support the institutions of society--that is meant when we speak of science as ideology.
Not saying, that science is a bad thing, we just have to realize the bias and limitations science do have. And the same could be said about religion. Nobody wins.
/debate
Religion and Science are both ideologies. However, I am saying that Science is the better of the lesser pair because the evidence of it's accomplishments are right in front of us. The basic scientific principle shows this. You always end up with an exact answer, even if it wasn't the one that you intended. You always find out something about your problem, and therefore are making progress.
Religion does NOT do this. Religion does not have pure basic evidence of whatever they claim to be right or true over the human society and race. Religion goes off the ideas that were based on a human society that can no longer be based upon ours' today, because of how long ago they were made.
I understand that science can be misinterpreted by the many people that are scientists and/or involved in the many connections with the ideology. However, science's ideas would have a much more basis on today's society than religions'.
Science wins, because it is based on today's society and can always be revised.
Religion's ideas are far to out of date of apply to today's society. Today, we all just have philosophies that can be revised accordingly to the ever changing society.
Go ahead and break that down.
Reidar
May 6 2008, 12:13 AM
Tung is equivocating the concept of science and what comprises it, which is indisputably an objective method, with how science is socially appertained. That's a syllogistic fallacy.
Society is subjective.
Science is a part of society.
Therefore, science is subjective.
No. The application of science is part of society. That is obviously subjective. More obviously, that does not define what science is.
If a scientific procedure is influenced in any way, shape, or form by discretionary variables, then it is not science. It will be refuted and discredited by anyone with a sharp eye. That doesn't mean there's susceptibility to relativism. Like philosophy, science admits to be self-corrective in the aspiration to objective truth.
Thankfully, there exist far more exercisable measures to eliminate unwanted outside vacillations than that post would have one believe.
freeridefight
May 7 2008, 12:41 AM
QUOTE(Reidar @ May 6 2008, 01:13 AM)

Tung is equivocating the concept of science and what comprises it, which is indisputably an objective method, with how science is socially appertained. That's a syllogistic fallacy.
Society is subjective.
Science is a part of society.
Therefore, science is subjective.
No. The application of science is part of society. That is obviously subjective. More obviously, that does not define what science is.
If a scientific procedure is influenced in any way, shape, or form by discretionary variables, then it is not science. It will be refuted and discredited by anyone with a sharp eye. That doesn't mean there's susceptibility to relativism. Like philosophy, science admits to be self-corrective in the aspiration to objective truth.
Thankfully, there exist far more exercisable measures to eliminate unwanted outside vacillations than that post would have one believe.
then are you telling me that religion itself is not objective? Religion was made by society, therefore in your own words itself is objective.
And how does the scientific method influence that it is lower or the same level than religion? Yes it is self-corrective, which only establishes a higher platform on which science is better. Religions do not self-correct themselves. It says this is the way, and you are wrong. Science says I may be wrong, let's redo this.
Reidar
May 7 2008, 02:55 PM
QUOTE(freeridefight @ May 7 2008, 12:41 AM)

then are you telling me that religion itself is not objective? Religion was made by society, therefore in your own words itself is objective.
No. That's the exact opposite of my point in demonstrating what a syllogistic fallacy amounts to. The sum does not equate to the whole.
QUOTE
And how does the scientific method influence that it is lower or the same level than religion?
It doesn't.
QUOTE
Yes it is self-corrective, which only establishes a higher platform on which science is better.
You're reiterating my points. The fact that science is subject to amelioration makes it a logical process. It has to be able to accommodate newfound information.
NoSex
May 7 2008, 03:19 PM
QUOTE(heartquasm @ May 5 2008, 10:02 PM)

Look, I understand what you're saying and I'm telling YOU that just because you and the rest of the world decided that science wins, etc., that argument is never going to work with people who are religious, so why even bother trying?
I didn't realize you were arguing that scientific thought is futile in the course of convincing the faithful. I thought you were proposing some sort of strange fundamental stalemate between faith and reason - as if faith had any merit whatsoever.
But, now that I do realize your point, I'll have to respectfully disagree. "The argument" has numerous uses and is surely worth "trying." You just have to look at it from a different angle. But, as for the narrow angle you seem to be deploying here: Yes, science can "work with people who are religious." I was once religious. I know many other people who were
once religious - they no longer are. This is thanks, in large, to scientific thought. So, you're wrong.
Further, I find a great deal of offense in the idea you're positing. Are you encouraging ignorance or do you just have a great deal of sympathy towards bliss?
Melissa
May 16 2008, 06:24 PM
Okay, so now I'm an advocate for ignorance. Great.
Let me just say this. When I say that using scientific thought to "convert" religions people doesn't work, I am talking about the religious people who zealously believe in their relationship with God (etc) and actually dig into so-called scientific thought to find cases that support their belief and give reason to cases that don't. At the end of the day, the basis behind their belief is faith and science - though valid - is a force trying to shake them of their faith. I'm not talking about the everyday, run of the mill Christian who goes to church on Sundays and believes what his or her parents tell them to believe.
I've known plenty of people who were once religious as well, but at the same time, I've had conversations with priests and well-known speakers at my old church, asking about science. These people knew a lot about scientific discoveries and were able to work through every obstacle presented. Why do you think so many people are religious?
There are plenty of scientists that are religious as well. There are tons of engineers at my school, and a great number of them are religious. Science and religion, in my opinion, aren't two things that can successfully be brought head to head. If science alone can shake your religious beliefs, I'm sorry to say, but your belief must have been incredibly shallow.
And I'd also like to defend the "ignorance" you claim that I am encouraging. Do you really think that people who are religious are ignorant in scientific thought? Do you really think you're teaching anybody things that they don't already know? As I said - many people who are religious are also scientists. Try bringing in your "scientific thought" and making it change their beliefs.
Reidar
May 18 2008, 11:02 PM
If scientific evidence was enough to quell somebody's theistic beliefs, that would, ironically, be closer to a mutual compatibility than religion existing despite science, unamenable to correction.
shoryuken
Jul 13 2008, 09:33 PM
BUTHH.. closee thradd..
huskar
Sep 3 2008, 12:20 PM
Well I know what actually helped to sit before this computer and typ this message . Athiests are living a pretty happy life compared to someone who is without technology living in a isolated place cutoff from civilization with religion .
SammyTheHeadbutt
Sep 12 2008, 05:44 PM
This topic got me thinking about something my Archaeologu teacher said the other day..
QUOTE
we in the west have one of the scariest religions in the world; it's called science.
if you think in many ways science has many things a religion has in the sense there is a belief, a reason for life beginning and a prediction of the afterlife or rather lack of it. Science is just based on experiment and truth or "truth" rather than belief.
May sound like an odd thing to say, but if you think about it, i recken it makes sense? prehaps it's just me?
brooklyneast05
Sep 12 2008, 05:53 PM
how is science scary? it's giving you proof/logical explanations to how the world works without condemning you to eternal suffering. that doesn't sound half as scary as religion to me.
i don't think your teacher makes very much sense.
SammyTheHeadbutt
Sep 13 2008, 04:24 AM
I'm not saying he was right or anything..
i am simply saying it is an iteresting view on the subject.
tripod
Sep 16 2008, 12:12 PM
It is said that science without religion is lame and religion without science is blind.Both science and religion are two sides of the same coin. One cannot develop without the support of other.Both are equally important to me.
NoSex
Sep 16 2008, 07:32 PM
QUOTE(tripod @ Sep 16 2008, 12:12 PM)

One cannot develop without the support of other.Both are equally important to me.
How can science not develop without religion? That doesn't make any sense to me.
Tung
Sep 16 2008, 07:38 PM
^ Word. Science isn't base off beliefs and hope. It's base off actual physical experimentation to prove hypothesis's that are brought up. You don't need religion for scientific experimentation's.
What? Are you going to pray to God and hope that a certain chemical will react with another chemical? No.
cakedout
Sep 16 2008, 07:52 PM
Lol, you also can't explain love using numbers and statistics.
NoSex
Sep 16 2008, 08:32 PM
QUOTE(cakedout @ Sep 16 2008, 07:52 PM)

Lol, you also can't explain love using numbers and statistics.
Some people may disagree with such a summation, you do understand?
Blaqheartedstar
Sep 16 2008, 09:49 PM
^not joining in on the argument there.
QUOTE(Spiritual Winged Aura @ Dec 24 2004, 09:39 PM)

Religion helps make people safer . It help you to become a better person. Religion is mainly about beliefs and how to become a better person . . . the problem is . . did anyone prove that gods existed ? etc ..
Science helps people to be safe. Science tell us what to aware of. Without science, we wouldn't know where we are, what is safe? .. such as planets or universe ..... etc ..
If both have the intention to make us safe then why argue over it? I have a religious grandmother who just can't stop her obsession over it.
I think that if God has a plan or has the power to make us safe then he will fix the major problems thats wrong with the earth now. We are obviously in danger and it can help.
But seeing how thats not going to happen its up to science to tell us what we are doing wrong, and what we need to do to fix it.
I lean more towards science because without it we wouldn't have the things we have now. yes granted it has its downs but we aren't oblivious to the world's wonders.
fameONE
Sep 17 2008, 01:46 AM
Over the past couple years, I've drifted away from religion. I don't knock anyone who is devout to their faith of choice as long as they can be good person. Then again, who am I to judge? Being here, in a place where religion is the cause of senseless killings has brought me to my own personal belief that 'God' doesn't exist. I suppose you could say that the straw broke the camel's back (no pun intended).
x3missy
Sep 17 2008, 03:47 AM
"The religion is responsible for its followers: therefore can be held accountable for these actions."
Religion has become a key aspect that shapes peoples' morality (For example: If you _____, _____ will result as a punishment/reward.)
We have become so dependent on religion for answers that we no longer trust our instincts to influence our judgment. Instead of a strong sense of morals created solely by instinct, religion now plays a key role. This however, varies depending on how the religion is interpreted by its follower(s). When you have people who base their morals/values/ethics entirely on a religion, there will be extremists. (Saddam Hussein, inflicted terror to unbelievers who contended against Allah and His Messenger. His actions are done “in the name of Allah”. You also have the pro-life Christian group with a history of bombing clinics (killing many, especially doctors) but, “view of themselves as heroic rescuers aligned against Godless fornicators.”)
Ex: A teenager gets pregnant after being raped by one of her family members and wants an abortion.
According to pro-life and other anti-abortion groups, abortion should not be allowed unless the mother’s life is in danger. In this situation, would you rather be religiously correct and force the teen to keep the baby against her every will? Or because of the trauma she went through, and the major lifestyle shift that results in a teen pregnancy, should she be allowed to abort the baby? Morally speaking, it would be wrong to force any women no matter what, to have a baby against her will.
I think i just turned my argument into an irrelevant one.

Mmm, later I will
some how tie this all into science vs religion.
Blaqheartedstar
Sep 17 2008, 04:23 AM
^ women should have the choice. Tired of all these religious people thinking that they rule the world and "know" what god wants.
Same with Gay marriage. Tired of signs saying that god hates gays... how do they know that? did got whisper that into their ears?
back on topic. I believe that if science and religion can co exist together, religious people needs to real up to the world and its problems and not be a blatant fool thinking that god can save us when it is ALL us that has put us in this mess in the first place.
totally focusing on the main religions here in the states... mainly Christians... all other religions are totally cool and all and i hardly ever hear anything on them.
SammyTheHeadbutt
Sep 24 2008, 07:21 AM
I agree that when some religious people prechng about gay marriage and abortion and even getting their kids involved is highly odd, and to be completely honest i don't think its any of their business.
But saying all Christians are like that would be a very wrong assumption as it is actually only a small number. I'm a christian by choice not because i was brought up to be like that, and i attend church and no christian i have ever met is like that. Although im not sure what its like in America, all the tv shows show the extremist christians it seems.
But anyway on the topic of science Vs. religion, i don't think you can clearly have a winner, and there will always be followers of both, and why bother putting down something you do not personally believe? It wont stop anyone else believing it.
humans will neve be able to prove one side better than the other, because while we may never be able to prove if there is a god, or many gods we cannot really prove that there aren't.
Reidar
Sep 27 2008, 10:41 PM
QUOTE(SammyTheHeadbutt @ Sep 24 2008, 07:21 AM)

humans will neve be able to prove one side better than the other, because while we may never be able to prove if there is a god, or many gods we cannot really prove that there aren't.
You don't need to prove or disprove the concept of a god in an absolute regard to explain how one system is more useful, applicable, and realistic than the other.
mipadi
Sep 28 2008, 09:59 AM
QUOTE(x3missy @ Sep 17 2008, 04:47 AM)

When you have people who base their morals/values/ethics entirely on a religion, there will be extremists. (Saddam Hussein, inflicted terror to unbelievers who contended against Allah and His Messenger. His actions are done “in the name of Allah”.
Actually, under Hussein, the government of Iraq was largely secular, and Hussein was anything but a devoted Muslim. I don't believe he invoked the name of Allah to justify any of his actions, unless he was perhaps pandering to religious conservatives.
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